Africa is the second largest continent on earth and has immense resources, yet African people are poor. The question is “why are we poor” if we have all this wonderful land, sea, shores? We are poor because of misrule, because we are badly governed. I don’t subscribe to the narrative that Africa is backward because of colonialism. Africa has been independent for 50 years now. Let’s forget the past, we need to get up and dust-off ourselves and get on with life.

What actually happened in the last 50 to 60 years is that we missed a lot of opportunities. At the moment of independence, many African countries like Ghana and Egypt had higher income per capita than China, India or Singapore. Where are we now? And where are those guys?

I think the blame should rest squarely on the way we have governed ourselves.

Not any amount of aid is going to move Africa forward. The only way for us to move forward is to ensure good governance – the way we manage our economy, our social life, our legal structures and institutions – that is the basis for development. We cannot rely on people to come and feed our poor or treat our sick. This is the responsibility of our governments.

Governance is not just about corruption or transparency or human rights or democracy or roads etc., it is about all of this. There is no compromise. All this is a basket of deliverables which governments must deliver to their citizens. If it is about deliverables then it is measureable. What we need to do is look at numbers and not wonderful leaders’ speeches. I want to know what leaders did in the last 12 months. We need to measure this every year and we need to produce a scorecard. This is how the Ibrahim Index of African Governance came about.

Leadership is also important. It became obvious to us that we need leaders that understand that they are running their country for the benefit of every single individual. Every child in this country is his responsibility; we need people who really believe in that, who cannot go to sleep because some people cannot eat or cannot find medicine. This is the kind of leadership that we need in Africa – an enlightened and dedicated sort of leadership. With this in mind, we came to the decision that we really need to go out searching for these heroes. We need role models that are important. This is why the Ibrahim Prize for Achievement is in African Leadership.

These were the two main issues we really cared about: the issue of leadership and the role of the leadership in transforming the society and how they started building the institutions. Societies are not sustainable without institutions.

Right now, the most important challenge, in my view, is African youth. We have a huge bulge of youngsters coming forward but where do the jobs come from, and what will happen to those people? The other day someone in our research team worked out that the average age of an African president is about 63 years old when the average age of the citizen is 19 years old. So you can really see the gap between our leadership and our people.

One major problem we have is the education system which, unfortunately, is not doing very well. If you are African, the more educated you are, the less chances you have of getting a job. This says something – education is too serious to be left to the few bureaucrats in ministries of education who have no connection to the real world. This is an area where you really need a national debate between business people, education specialists, and young people to know exactly what kind of work force we need to build in Africa.

China is already running out of labour, moving production houses out of China. We all know about the one child policy and that is one of the outcomes. Who is going to be the next factory of the world, is it going to be Africa? We have a lot of attractions – geographic locations, cheap labour, etc. but we are not ready because we need to build the infrastructure and we need to train our young people and give them the right skills. We need people who can really build and do things. This is a big challenge for us.

“The other day someone in our research team worked out that the average age of an African president is about 63 years old when the average age of the citizen is 19 years old. So you can really see the gap between our leadership and our people.”

That challenge is immediately linked to the question of regional integration. People talk about Africa as if it is one country. Africa is not one country, Africa is 54 countries, which are not necessarily trading or communicating among themselves. It is more difficult to pass goods from East Africa to West Africa than taking it from China to West Africa and is more expensive.

If you are an African, and you decide to visit every other African country and you are unfortunate enough to have an African passport, you are going to spend a year trying to get visas for all those 53 countries. I have to travel to the country with my British passport, not my Sudanese passport because it takes me a month to get a visa with it.

We need to lay down the basis for the free trade area across Africa. We have been talking about regional integration for ages and its progress is proving very slow. Many African countries will not be viable without regional integration, full stop. We have to accept that, we need each other; we really need to open-up our borders to have free movement of goods, people and capital across our borders. Everywhere I go in Africa, I raise the question of why the Germans need the European Union and keep bailing people out? The answer is simple: they need it because they want to move their goods around.

We have almost 600 million mobile users in Africa, which is much more than European users. We have much more users than the United States but are we really proud of that? How many mobile phones were manufactured in Africa? None. If we don’t have the economies of scale, we are unable to force the trade required; we are unable to get a good deal for our manufacturers. Can Siemens sell a single mobile phone in China without building a factory there or transferring know-how? No way.

We are not able to force our demands on any of these companies or businesses because we are 54 failed voices; we need one big voice. And we cannot have that unless we force ahead with this integration.

Good governance in the public sector is a prerequisite for development but it is not enough. We cannot have it without also having good governance in the private sector; people need to understand that. If we have a go at corruption we really need to deal with it in the private sector, there is no question about that. Political leaders don’t corrupt themselves; they have partners in the private sector.

The illicit transfer of funds is another important issue. The illicit transfer of funds out of Africa is at least double the amount of aid that Africa receives every year. This speaks for itself. We need multinational companies to pay their taxes. Small African countries have very weak tax collection systems. We don’t have fantastic lawyers and forensic accountants who can really challenge these companies.

Britain has also discovered that it has the same problem; everybody has the same problem, even the United States. It is interesting that this issue – which we have been screaming out about for decades – suddenly, came to be in the forefront of the political debate in the UK and many European countries. We hope that, at last, people in the developed countries are going to move forward now to stop all this nonsense. It is not acceptable anymore. Where is your leadership, where is good governance in your institutions? The light of transparency is shining over all of us now. It is impossible to keep secrets now because everything is leaked. We can find out everything about everybody. So if we are all naked, why don’t we behave and act in a decent way?

We are really seeking transparency everywhere. And we need to insist on transparency in the private sector because, believe me, we cannot have good governance in the public sector unless we also have good governance in the private sector. These two must really go hand-in-hand.

Thank for this very insightful piece on Africa our home. We have great potential and extremely willing and capable people to achieve great things! What we need is leaders who put the people first and are willing to leave a positive legacy!

Yonas

A very insightful piece. I don’t see how major reforms on transparency (e.g. most mining contracts remain confidential etc) or on integration could be achieved while leaders are not committed to go out of their confidence zones. As well, integration will not be of interest to our foreign counterparts who benefit a lot from the divide and rule! The idea is good but do we have a champion? If even the AU headquarters building had to be foreign financed, do we have anything of our own?

Leanne

Mr. Ibrahim: Thank you for your experienced, more than insightful observations for redevelopment; of the true collective energy/need. Focusing on structural private/public interdependence in leadership v/s holding onto a dis-structured past will be key.

Personally speaking, it would be more than an opportunity to work with your foundation on this initiative. May I take the liberty to send you my CV?!

Katy N.

Totally agree–All the aid in the world doesn’t matter if the government keeps siphoning off funds for their own purposes instead of using them in the most effective way for the people. The culture of corruption is stymieing progress in development and keeps people poor.

dqk

Right on. The global north may be able to help with education and health, without an obsession with family planning. But that’s about it.

Samtop O. Awopeju

Thank you Mr. Ibrahim, for hitting the nail on the head regarding the unfortunate and miserable problems facing our beloved Africa. This short article, articulately revealed the key factors required to transform Africa into a haven of opportunities. I totally agree that for us to achieve sustainable development(social, economic and environment) good governance both in public and private sector is fundamental. I hope some of our leaders will read this piece and give it a serious thought. Jack Welch says “Control your destiny or someone else will.”, our leaders cannot continue to rely on foreign aid/assistance to fight poverty, food insecurity e.tc, we need to develop strong internal will to find ways of solving our problems lest we become victims of international negotiations.

Fadesere Toluwanimi John

Well said brother, it is rather unfortunate for a continent to relegate its youths. Africa has underdeveloped itself through bad governance and lack of integrity.

kwameoh

I will not bore you with the philosophical and methodological debate
which rages on here in the Western hemisphere aka “Real world” with
regards education , however will say ,

“We can continue to educate the African to facilitate so called “Inwards investment”
, or we can start to educate the African to Invest in real and sustainable, inclusive global investment as part of the”real world economy” ”

Until such a time we The African always be considered as part of the bottom line.

Flozzy

It is perfectly true, unless we are united as one continent, we will not go anywhere. our resources will be wasted and posterity will have no future. I am sure our name might even be changed from “developing” to “hopeless” countries

Let’s keep this going …

Why not join our growing community of social innovators? You’ll get exclusive content and opportunities delivered straight to your inbox and all the latest details from the Skoll World Forum.